Grandpa Ron
Been spending a lot of time on here!
- Joined
- Aug 9, 2018
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- Can others edit my Photos
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While I do enjoy working in the dark room, the fact remains that it is time consuming, mostly because I do not have a dedicated darkroom.
Like many, I develop my 4x5 sheet film in a daylight tank, then shoot the 4x5 negatives on a light table with tripod and a Canon digital. I can zoom the negative to fill the view finder and use a remote release. This allows me to select the negatives I want to print.
I down load the digital negatives into GIMP, or Adobe and sometimes Picasa to convert to a positive print. The problem is when converting the negatives to digital and downloading them, they seem to loose contrast. I have varied the light table intensity, shot the negative on the Monochrome setting but the result always requires some degree of digital post-processing.
So my question is, "Is this loss of contrast normal"? The same subject taken digitally on the monochrome camera setting shoots looks very good.
Any suggestions.
Like many, I develop my 4x5 sheet film in a daylight tank, then shoot the 4x5 negatives on a light table with tripod and a Canon digital. I can zoom the negative to fill the view finder and use a remote release. This allows me to select the negatives I want to print.
I down load the digital negatives into GIMP, or Adobe and sometimes Picasa to convert to a positive print. The problem is when converting the negatives to digital and downloading them, they seem to loose contrast. I have varied the light table intensity, shot the negative on the Monochrome setting but the result always requires some degree of digital post-processing.
So my question is, "Is this loss of contrast normal"? The same subject taken digitally on the monochrome camera setting shoots looks very good.
Any suggestions.